Hurricane Resistant Homes & Tiny House Kits
You get structural overkill with zero aesthetic appeal or you get beautiful coastal architecture that turns into kindling when the big one hits.
Hurricane resistant house kits that don’t look like fortresses
Hurricane-resistant construction usually means adding reinforcements to wood framing until it passes inspection. More straps, more concrete, more time.
That approach works, but you’re still working with a material that wants to split and warp under stress.
Momo homes start with cold-formed steel. The frames won’t crack or deform at 185 mph. Panels are manufactured to millimeter-level precision, which eliminates the gaps and weak points that turn wind into structural damage. Our Surefoot foundation system uses steel instead of heavy concrete pours, so it’s more stable when the ground moves or floods.
Builders receive a complete kit engineered to Miami-Dade standards. One shipment, ready to assemble in weeks instead of months.
Our hurricane-resistant home designs
Hurricane-resistant home features
Engineered to withstand winds up to 185 mph. That’s hurricane resistance you can count on.
Frames and panels that won’t warp, melt, split, or crack under pressure. Superior strength compared to wood framing.
Panels manufactured to millimeter-level accuracy mean tighter seals and fewer gaps where wind and water can infiltrate. Traditional stick-built homes have more variability, which means more vulnerability.
Steel footings with a 150+ year lifespan that use minimal concrete. More stable during flooding and ground shifts than traditional concrete slabs that crack and settle.
Heavy-gauge aluminum windows with thermal break efficiency. Exterior doors feature impact-resistant glass. Operable window shutters provide additional storm protection.
Steel framing, windows, doors, flooring, cabinetry, fixtures. One shipment in standard containers. Structure goes from foundation to weathertight in about three weeks.
Every home comes wired for solar panels and battery storage. When the grid goes down after a storm, you’ve got power.
Where hurricane-resistant homes make sense
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Coastal properties in Florida, Gulf Coast states, and the Carolinas where hurricanes are a regular threat.
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Barrier islands and beachfront lots where wind exposure is highest and building codes are strictest.
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Flood-prone areas where traditional concrete foundations crack and settle over time.
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Hurricane-prone regions looking to rebuild after storm damage with structures that won’t fail again.
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Investment properties in coastal markets where insurance costs and storm risk affect long-term value.
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Primary residences in high-wind zones where peace of mind during storm season matters.
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Vacation homes in hurricane corridors that need to survive months of vacancy.